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24 November 2023 | Story Jóhann Thormählen | Photo Rooistoel
Sikholiwe (Sne) Mdletshe
The former Kovsie captain Sne Mdletshe still loves fitness and is nowadays a netball conditioning coach at the Sekondêre Meisieskool Oranje.

If she is not using her talent, she is wasting it.

This conviction is one the reasons why Sikholiwe (Sne) Mdletshe has been inspiring those around her at a young age.

She believes in using the talent you are gifted with. The former Protea has not only excelled on the netball court, but maximises her talents as an academic, conditioning coach, working professional, and lately a Springbok women’s sevens player.

And it was with the assistance of the University of the Free State (UFS) that Mdletshe (24) was able to develop holistically and strike a balance between her studies and sport.

The first-year audit trainee at Ernst & Young is an ambassador for the UFS Sporting Legends project, which celebrates current and former Kovsie sports stars by featuring their journeys in a video and story series.

The series looks at the impact the UFS has had on their careers, how it has uniquely shaped them, and helped them to excel – whether in sport or the world of work.

Proud Kovsie

She represented the UFS from 2017 to 2022, captained Kovsies in 2020 and 2021, and won Varsity Netball twice (2018 and 2021).

In 2019, Mdletshe was the UFS Junior Sportswoman of the Year, and in 2020 – at only 21 years old – she was named one of the Mail & Guardian’s 200 Young South Africans.

The former Free State Crinums player is not only a role model on court, but also an academic example.

She was a candidate fellow in the Allan Gray Orbis Foundation from 2018 to 2021 and graduated to being an Allan Gray Fellow in 2022. Mdletshe obtained BCom Accounting, BCom Accounting Honours degrees, and a Postgraduate Diploma in Chartered Accountancy at the UFS.

“It’s special to be a Kovsie, because you are part of a family – at KovsieSport and just at Kovsies as a whole.

“Even outside of university, you still connect with the people you met at the UFS,” she says.

She is grateful for the support to pursue a sporting and academic career.

“I wrote about seven tests in a hotel conference room being invigilated by my coach.

“That was only possible because the UFS is interlinked, and the faculties understood that we are sports people within an accounting faculty.

“Studying is hard, but at KovsieSport they understood that I am an academic as well.”

Protea dress

She has also been a leader on court and captained the national under-19 and under-21 netball teams.

And in November 2020, she made her Protea debut against Malawi in Sun City.

The former Kovsie captain, who played two tests, says when you make your senior debut, you receive your Protea dress from the seniors about an hour before the clash.

“That is the first time you put it on, with your surname on the back and everything.”

“At that moment, I was like: Wow!”

“To stand there and sing that anthem in that dress, was amazing!”

Fitness fanatic

It was early in high school (Middelburg High School) when a pivotal moment took place.

She remembers one of the pastors saying: “If you have a talent, the talent is not yours, it is God’s.”

“I thought: ‘If I’m not using my talent, I’m wasting it’.”

This was also when fitness started to play a bigger role in her life. She says in high school her friends would think she was crazy, as she would go for a run on a Sunday afternoon when they just wanted to sleep.

“Fitness gave me a break. It gave me a space where I was allowed to be in my own world.”

Although she is not currently playing netball, Mdletshe still trains diligently before sunrise and work.

And she lives out her fitness passion as a netball conditioning coach at the Sekondêre Meisieskool Oranje.

Life after netball and Springbok rugby

Mdletshe says she is now focusing on life after netball and her goal is to be a chartered accountant.

She enjoys her work at Ernst & Young: “It is audit, it is accounting, and I love it. I feel like I am in the right place.”

In 2023, she started playing women’s rugby to do something social after work. Only a few months later, she was scoring hat tricks and helped the Free State win the national First Division.

The outside back says things escalated quickly, and soon she was starting for her club Bloemfontein Collegians.

“My body and mind can’t understand that we are doing social (rugby). It needs to be serious. It is either that you are all in or not.”

She was invited to a national women’s sevens pre-season camp and has quickly taken her rugby career to the next level.

Mdletshe was selected for the South African side that competed at the Rugby Africa Women’s Sevens Olympics 2024 Qualifier. She would have made her debut for the Springbok sevens team in Tunisia in October 2023 but unfortunately picked up an injury.

Watch the video featureto get a glimpse of Sne Mdletshe’s journey and life.

News Archive

Mekondjo! National exhibition to reveal the courage, determination, repression and torture of PLAN
2014-05-21

 
Angelina Angula ex PLAN soldier injured during the 1978 Cassinga attack - photo by John Liebenberg.

A pioneering exhibition by John Liebenberg and Christo Doherty is about to open on the Bloemfontein Campus. ‘Mekondjo! born in the struggle for Namibia’ gives South Africans their first insight into the lives of the men and women who fought against the SADF in the bush of Northern Namibia and Angola from 1966 – 1989.

This public exhibition presents eleven portraits of People’s Liberation Army veterans in the process of speaking about and coming to terms with their very different experiences in the Namibian War of Liberation.

When the People’s Liberation Army (PLAN) returned to Namibia after the UN-supervised elections of 1989, it had been fighting against South African rule for 23 years. Formed in 1966 as the armed wing of the South West African Peoples’ Organisation, PLAN had developed from a handful of poorly armed guerrillas to a sophisticated mechanised force. These soldiers fought alongside Angolan, Russian and Cuban soldiers against the SADF and UNITA. Since SWAPO’s election victory, the new government has mythologised the heroism of the armed struggle. The stories of the individual PLAN fighters’ experiences are only now being articulated, though.

Their stories are of great courage and determination against often impossible odds; but also of repression, torture, and disastrous decisions by the PLAN leadership.

The exhibition will be on display from Thursday 22 May to Friday 23 May for the duration of the Silence after Violence conference. The conference is hosted by the UFS Institute for Reconciliation and Social Justice and the Center for Holocaust Studies at the University of Vermont.

Date: Thursday 22 May and Friday 23 May 2014
Place: Centenary Complex, Reitz Hall, Bloemfontein Campus
Exhibition Introduction: Thursday 22 May, 14:00 – 15:30
Other viewing times: intermissions during the Silence after Violence programme

The public is welcome to attend.

* Spotlight photo: PLAN commissioner Nkrumah Mushelenga, Windhoek 2013 – photo by John Liebenberg

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